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Marks, Gary N. – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2020
Most studies on the relationship between students' socioeconomic status (SES) and student achievement assume that its effects are sizable and causal. A large variety of theoretical explanations have been proposed. However, the SES-achievement association may reflect, to some extent, the inter-relationships of parents' abilities, SES, children's…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Academic Achievement, Causal Models, Ability
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Marks, Gary N.; O'Connell, Michael – Review of Education, 2021
Students' socioeconomic status (SES) is central to much research and policy deliberation on educational inequalities. However, the SES model is under severe stress for several reasons. SES is an ill-defined concept, unlike parental education or family income. SES measures are frequently based on proxy reports from students; these are generally…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Academic Achievement, Equal Education, Predictor Variables
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Armor, David J.; Marks, Gary N.; Malatinszky, Aron – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2018
After the U.S. Supreme Court restricted the use of race in assigning students to schools, there was a surge in advocacy of school integration based on student socioeconomic status (SES). Benefits of socioeconomic integration have been supported by various studies finding significant effects of school SES on achievement after controlling for…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Equal Education, Academic Achievement, Student Characteristics
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Marks, Gary N. – Australian Educational Researcher, 2017
This paper demonstrates that the emphasis on students' socioeconomic status (SES) in research and policy circles in Australia is unwarranted. The bivariate relationships between SES and educational outcomes are only moderate and the effects of SES are quite small when taking into account cognitive ability or prior achievement. These two influences…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Socioeconomic Status, Outcomes of Education, Correlation
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Marks, Gary N. – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2017
The consensus among education researchers is that value-added models are most appropriate for assessing the relative effectiveness of schools, teachers, or programmes for student learning. The preferred value-added model adjusts for prior achievement, but there is a variety of other specifications that may or may not include prior achievement.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, School Effectiveness, Value Added Models, Comparative Analysis
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Marks, Gary N. – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2016
Multi-domain and longitudinal studies of student achievement routinely find moderate to strong correlations across achievement domains and even stronger within-domain correlations over time. The purpose of this study is to examine the sources of these patterns analysing student achievement in 5 domains across Years 3, 5 and 7. The analysis is of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Correlation, Student Characteristics, Longitudinal Studies
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Marks, Gary N. – Journal of School Choice, 2017
Critics of Catholic and independent (nongovernment) schools in Australia contend that the higher levels of performance of students in nongovernment schools can be dismissed as simply a function of student- and especially school-level socioeconomic status (school-SES). A recent article extends this critique to school-sector differences in students'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Private Schools, Educational Environment
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Marks, Gary N. – Oxford Review of Education, 2015
Schools' socioeconomic status (SES) has been claimed as an important influence on student performance and there are calls for a policy response. However, there is an extensive literature which for various reasons casts doubt on the veracity of school-SES effects. This paper investigates school-SES effects with population data from a longitudinal…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Longitudinal Studies, Elementary Schools, Secondary Schools
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Marks, Gary N. – Australian Journal of Education, 2015
In this article, school sector differences in tertiary entrance performance were examined using longitudinal data from the state of Victoria in Australia for 2011. Analysis of students' Tertiary Entrance Aggregate, from which the Australian Tertiary Admission Rank is derived, revealed non-trivial effect sizes of sector on performance. Results…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Private Schools, College Entrance Examinations
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Marks, Gary N. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
Recently in this journal, Sciffer, Perry, and McConney (2020) argued that school socioeconomic-background (SES) compositional effects are important for both research and policy. In response, this commentary argues that realistic school SES effects can only be identified in properly specified models. Otherwise, the estimated school effects are very…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, School Demography, Academic Achievement, Institutional Characteristics
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Marks, Gary N.; Pokropek, Artur – Oxford Review of Education, 2019
This study examines the influence of family income on student achievement in mathematics utilising data from the parents' questionnaire for nine countries participating in the OECD's 2012 PISA study. It finds non-trivial effects for family income that were consistently larger than, or comparable to, the effects of more commonly used measures of…
Descriptors: Family Income, Socioeconomic Status, Mathematics Achievement, Foreign Countries
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Marks, Gary N. – Australian Journal of Education, 2014
This paper examines changes in demographic and socioeconomic inequalities in student achievement over the school career, and the extent that these inequalities are accounted for by other influences such as, region and socioeconomic background (where appropriate), school differences and prior achievement. The data analysed are from a longitudinal…
Descriptors: Social Differences, Socioeconomic Status, Academic Achievement, Longitudinal Studies